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Business Plan Template

Every social enterprise needs a business plan. However, every social enterprise is different and your
business plan should be developed to reflect your own enterprise in the best possible way.
Following a prescriptive business plan template is unlikely to lead to a good business plan. However, we
realise that it can be difficult to know where to start and for that reason, we have provided a framework of
some common and useful business plan sections. Under each heading, we have described some of the
points you might want to cover in this section.
Bear in mind that one business plan may not be appropriate for several audiences, so consider having
different versions for different people e.g. you may have a more comprehensive business plan for internal
management purposes and a shorter version for investors or key supporters. Using appendices to provide
detailed supplementary information where necessary, can be a useful way of maintaining a consistent format
across different versions of the same business plan.
It can often be useful to have a look at other peoples business plans to pick up ideas about format and
structure, or even just to notice where other people have gone wrong!
You should also think about using photos and other visual images to help break up the text of your business
plan, particularly if you have photos of your social enterprise in action.

1.

Executive Summary

This is the first thing most people will read and its your chance to make a good first impression. Your aim is
to hook people in so they want to find out more about your social enterprise.
This section should be short and snappy, giving a brief overview of what your social enterprise does, where
you are at the moment, where you want to go and how you will get there.

2.

The Social Enterprise

This is where you introduce the key facts about your social enterprise the name, contact details, legal
status, start date, structure and a few sentences to describe your business idea, your product or service and
the social aims of the enterprise.

3.

The Organisation

If your social enterprise is part of a larger organisation, it can be helpful to include a section about the
background of the organisation, its aims and key details like number of years of operating, annual turnover,
number of staff and management structure.

4.

The Market

In this section, you should summarise what you have learned from your market research and analysis and
then describe how you will apply this learning in your own marketing and sales efforts.
It can be helpful to arrange this in two sub-sections as follows:

Market Analysis

Who will buy your products or services


Why they will buy from you (your unique selling point)
Trends in your market that you have identified from research

Levels and types of competition in your market


Results of any market testing you have done
Lessons from similar businesses including social enterprises

Marketing Strategy
You should describe the key elements of your marketing strategy (i.e. how you will respond to the learning
above), including

5.

Your routes to market (e.g. how will you distribute your products or services, including e-commerce
options)
Pricing
Promotional mix
Customer care policy
Customer feedback
Who will be involved in marketing
How much you have budgeted for marketing

Social Impact

In this section, you should summarise how you will make a difference i.e. what is the social in your social
enterprise?
Areas to cover include:

Who will benefit from your social enterprise?


Why is your social enterprise needed?
How will your social enterprise meet that need?
Your training and employment support model for people excluded from the labour market
How you are working with different partners
Who are your stakeholders and what type of consultation have you done with them?
How will you measure your social impact and have you budgeted for this?

You may want to include a detailed stakeholder analysis and table of intended outcomes and activities as an
appendix, or you may simply wish to reference this and say that it is available on request.

6.

Business Development

This section is where you should summarise what youve learned about what you need to do to maximise the
chances of your social enterprise succeeding.
You should identify:

Key issues in the external business environment that may affect you
Key issues in relation to your internal strengths and weaknesses
Key issues which affect the industry you operate in
The main critical success factors you have identified and your strategies to address these

Much of the information from this section will come from the analyses you carried out during the Exploration
stage, including your SWOT and PEST analyses and any feasibility study you completed. Rather than

including all of that information in this section, you may prefer to summarise the key points and then include
the more detailed documents as appendices.

7.

People

This section should highlight the key people that will be involved in making your social enterprise a success.
This may include staff, volunteers and Board members. You should consider including:

A brief description of the roles and responsibilities of each person


An organisational structure chart to show the relationships between people
A summary of the skills, experience and knowledge of everyone involved
Any training plans you have

More detailed information can be included as an appendix if necessary including job descriptions and CVs.

8.

Operations

This section is where you provide details of all the nuts and bolts of your social enterprise. The type of
information you need to include here will obviously depend on your particular business but your aim should
be to give anyone reading the business plan enough information to make an informed assessment of how
well you have planned your operations. It should also act as a useful reference point for your Board and staff.
Areas to think about include:

Premises

Where your business is located


Whether you are leasing or buying and why
Whether you need to have any renovation or adaptation work carried out
Regulatory, planning and OHS issues associated with your premises
Insurances needed, and costs of this.

Suppliers

Who are you main suppliers?


Alternative suppliers
Advantages and any problems with suppliers

Equipment

Description and costs of equipment and vehicles to be purchased or leased


Any finance arrangements needed for equipment?
What is your depreciation policy?

Production

What are your production methods?


Details of supervision arrangements
Details of any quality standards for your industry

External relations

Details of your professional and legal advisors


Details of any funders and investors
Membership of any monitoring or quality assurance networks

9.

Membership of any trade associations


Details of any other relevant networks

Finance

The financial section of your business plan is, in many ways, the most important one. However, you will need
to think carefully about how much financial information you share with different audiences as there may be
commercially or personally sensitive information included in your financial forecasts (e.g. your supplier
discounts or staff salaries).
You may want to provide a summarised version of your financial model, making more details available on
request.
It can be useful to organise your financial information in three sub-sections:

Budget
As a minimum, you should include a forecast budget for at least 3 years, showing:

Sales
Non-commercial income (grants and donations)
Expenditure
Profit or loss

You should also detail the assumptions that your budget forecasts are based on (e.g. inflation, sales targets,
wages and salary levels).
You should also produce a cashflow forecast that estimates when money will flow in and out of the business.
This will help you to identify any potential problems in terms of paying suppliers, meeting staff costs etc.

Scenario Planning
It can also be useful to show that you have considered different scenarios e.g. worst case, best case, most
likely.
This helps to show how sensitive your social enterprise is to different factors and to demonstrate that you
have considered how you would address the worst case scenario.

Investment and funding


Here you should summarise the level of any external investment required and identify methods and options
for raising this finance.
It is useful to include details of any assets you can offer as security, as well as any track record you have of
managing external investment in the past.

10.

Appendices

We have already mentioned several areas where you may want to provide additional details in an appendix.
Other suggestions include:

References, testimonials and letters of support


Quotations for equipment
Professional advisers reports

Previous years accounts if you have them

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